Archive for March, 2008

The Blog About The Cartoon

I hated high school growing up. I tried attacking the necessary evil by several means…I did the first year entirely by independent study, the second I attempted to do completely at public school and when that failed due to recurring anxiety attacks, I resorted to completing the second and part of the third with a blend between independent study and public school. In the end, I decided that the normal right of passage known as High School was not for me and at age 16 I took the California State High School Proficiency Exam. It’s like the GED, only harder, and yet worth less. Basically, unlike a GED that transfers state to state, the CSHSPE is exclusive to California. This means that, should I have left the state before completing my AA degree, I would have been considered a high school drop out. Sweet. The details of my high school career are irrelevant, but they are the backdrop for the general direction of this blog.

One of my problems during high school (there were several, obviously) was the combined realities of being both bored and depressed. I had a decent group of consistent friends. We were the ones who couldn’t really be classified by any set group. We weren’t popular, we weren’t unpopular, we were generally a nonevent to the remainder of the population. As stated, though, I was depressed. I developed a unique outlet at that time which utilized my creativity to express my thoughts and feelings regarding the people around me. I started a comic strip. Odd, isn’t it? Each page of college ruled lined paper contained 12 cells of hand drawn representations of those who existed in my daily reality. The story line continued for the two years I attended El Dorado High School, and continued to be updated sporadically for the next few years. See, the plot varied depending on what was going on in my life. If a friend pissed me off, chances were that they’d be thrown in a cage or offed in the cartoon. Some friends knew the relevance of the comic strip, some were oblivious of its relation to reality.

The basis for the story began with the first two cells stating very simply: “One day the world made Natalie mad. So she built a big boat to sail away on”. Close friends were granted a spot on the boat, aquaintances I was unsure about were on the dingy that was towed by said boat. The boat its self landed on an island and there the story remained until the very end of the saga. Even then I longed to live life on a island – far away from anything and anyone who could cause me pain. The problem is, this notion in many ways became my way of living in real life.

I’ve lived my life as an island for the majority of the past few years with only a few brief moments of companionship to interrupt this way of living. Certainly, I am surrounded by people during work and church. I even have several good friends. As far as the heart, though, I remain a closely guarded island. Really, I think this way of living began to materialize during Junior High and that was likely an outcome of grade school. Between moving from England to here at age 6, changing schools again from age 6 to 8, then moving out to Virginia for 16 months at age 9, then back to California for year 10 and on, I was never in one place long enough to place any real roots. All the moving limited the longevity of friendships. The lack of history led to my acceptance that friendships were never going to be as deep and lasting as those of the ones around me. Junior High was so damaging that part of me vowed to never let people close again. Thus, life on the island began.

Living life in emotional solitude is a terrible life decision, and one that is extremely difficult to change. Like Peter Pan in “Hook”, too much time away from Neverland causes him to forget the way back. In the same fashion, I find myself just as lost.

They brought up in church today the idea that this thing called life can’t be done alone. Of course there is God, but the support system of people in fellowship with one another is crucial for surviving in this world. The one from the last few months used to be convinced that he lacked any true friendships. I saw the innacuracy of this at the time, but what I didn’t see is how true this idea is for me. I have people around, yes, but my support system of those who share the same faith is pretty much nonexistent. There was a short time when I was 18 and 19 where I had a good amount of relationship with the young adult group I was a part of. Then I broke up with the guy I was with, and as I put it – when we broke up, he got the kids. Last year I had what I hoped would be the beginning of several amazing friendships with the people from RockHarbor. Through my roommates as well as my involvement in the soccer connecting events I was allowing people onto the island.

Then I moved and it all got shot to hell. Or, so it seemed. That disconnect, though, is something I realize had a great deal to do with the start of this past relationship. I say this because I know that with that same group of people surrounding me during the break from someone I was seeing, the pain wouldn’t have become so all consuming – and I wouldn’t have fallen in the same manner. The past five months have caused the distance to expand quite a bit, but luckily it seems the damage is not irreprible. It’s that whole living on an island thing that needs work.

There was a questionaire that one of my myspace friends filled out today and in it was a question about regret. It got me thinking. Much has happened in the last few months, some good and some bad. The situation its self was obviously a bad idea, but the relationship is something I have difficulty doing anything but cherish. But, the fact remains that it was something which really never should have happened. So, do I regret it?

No. I don’t. I am sorry and repentant of the wrongdoing there was and for my responsibility for the consequences that followed as a result. What keeps me from regretting it all together is the great deal that I learned from it. I loved. I was loved. I learned much about life, relationships, and how to balance the two. The man himself is certainly not one I see as a negative. He was and is amazing. He was amazing to me and with me. That is something I have trouble regretting. But the fact remains that this has also aided in securing my life on the island. And now that all ties to him have been severed and my checking in has ceased (merely because doing so hurt more than helped and each time left me emotionally wrecked and confused…none the fault of him.) my island truly seems isolated.

And that’s something I’m taking steps to remedy. I have my amazing family, for one. I have several friends which have voiced all too loudly their disapproval of my absence. This week I intend to join the launching of a life group from church. And above all, I have my Savior taking the place of love and guide.

This blog is far from my usual poetic offering. It’s fragmented and not nearly as eloquent as my usual standards demand. I think the point is hiding in there somewhere, but sleep (and hopefully the recovery from the stellar cold I have managed to pick up) calls and must be answered.

If he still is reading, I hope the one mentioned above is well and on his way to happiness. My cease of following along is not a rejection, but a step of obedience to the path I believe God has me on. Letting go means completely removing my hands and eyes from the situation. This couldn’t happen as long as I was hanging on so tightly to every word and update I could find. The biggest test of trust is to believe that God really has him in the palm of His hand. I pray this is and will continue to be so.

The Blog With Just A Smidge Of Reality

It’s like coming off a drug – a drug that you know so well, and which knows you in return. Just as you are enthralled with its familiar buzz as its warmth creeps through your being setting nerve endings alive one by one with the most pleasurable of sensations, it in kind knows just how to keep you enraptured and bound to its intoxication. Just like any addiction, there’s the hunger, the craving, the need for this vice and the comfort it brings. You’ll do anything, give anything just for the promise of one more hit. It is an empty comfort, though. It is a placebo which takes on the guise of that which is wholesome and beneficial when in reality all that lies at the end of the high is the promise of destruction and death. One day you wake up and realize that you are no longer the one in control. Hell, you don’t even really know who you really are. All you know is that you are an entity enslaved to something far more powerful that your strength alone can overcome. The muscles of your will and your drive for self-preservation have atrophied and all that is left is a shell of what once was. A figment of your memory, and a blurry watercolor of the vibrant original masterpiece you once embodied.

This is what it feels like when reality comes crashing in like a swat team landing the fatal blow to the front door of your life. All the comfort, all the security, all the familiarity is gone and all that is left in its place is the hunger – the need to once again feel satisfied and know that tomorrow the world won’t be the unfamiliar and backwards thing it seems now. You feel vulnerable and exposed as the addict you really are. And for some reason you feel the need to write about it.

I usually begin these things with an abundance of emotion and pent up musings on a certain subject. There have been thoughts floating around in my head space for days and when the opportune moment arises, I grasp it and hole myself away with my laptop to purge my self of its nonsense. What usually happens, though, is between the honest thoughts and carefully constructed sentence structure comes the quest for perfectly poignant statements and groundbreaking use of obscurely poetic words which all serve the purpose of doing what I do best – constructing metaphorical walls of pretense behind which to hide. Of hiding, I am master. Even now, this whole paragraph has done nothing but tangent away from the original subject. This isn’t about hiding, though. In fact it’s much the opposite.

I have spent the last five months (and in varying incarnations, the last seven years) feeding an addiction. It may not have been a substance but it served the same purpose. He was a distraction. He was the comfort, the affirmation, the support, the reassurance that my biggest insecurities were completely unfounded. He counteracted every negative untruth I had ever been fed and caused to believe about myself – body, mind, soul, and spirit. He undid the damage of the summer preceding last and managed to heal that which I thought would never be the same. The relationship between us was perfect. Our interests, wants, needs, likes and dislikes were so similar that we seemed ideal. It was a good fit.

But it never should have been tried on in the first place. This was the problem. Many know the exact factual reason why this is the case. Others know that it was an “unhealthy relationship”. The last statement is one I always have to fight correcting. There’s only so much you can say while leaving out outright truth of the matter without the other person becoming incredibly confused. Still, I hate people having an inaccurate picture of the way things were. As I said to my father during a recent conversation, on every human level he was everything I wanted. And likewise I was to him. Obviously, however, there is the use of past-tense.

Which leads us to the harsh reality of now. I say harsh, but that really is only one variable of the equation. As harsh as the loss of him may be, the reassurance that what I’ve done and am doing is the right thing is enough to help keep me afloat. And for those not in the loop, a resounding “huh?” echoes.

A few months back I wrote a blog about marriage. It’s the one preceding this one, most likely. What few picked up on was just how much that blog had to do with me. It was more than just my theory on life or my jaded view of the institution. It was the backdrop of my life. More accurately, of his. And for those needing things to be spelled out: yes, he was married. Is married, to be exact.

For anyone not in the situation and certainly most around me it is hard to understand how this sort of thing could have happened. Anyone who has known me for any reasonable length of time knows how I’ve felt about marriage, infidelity, honesty, and most importantly God’s laws. My love of God has always come first. I may get wrapped up in other distractions, but the diversion is sort lived and once again my eyes and heart become fixed on the One who has held them captive since childhood. Why, then, would I get involved with something so blatantly condradictary to all that I hold to be true and right? What follows is by no means and excuse for my wrongdoing. It’s a bit of the time line of events that led me to make one, of not the most questionable and eventful choices of my life thus far. I can only assume that if anyone’s still reading, the desire to know more is there also.

If love makes you do the wacky, then hurt makes to do the unthinkable. That’s what led to it for me. Hurt. A whole freight train (because truck load just wasn’t sufficient) of pain. After the demise of a relationship that many are familiar with, I spent the next few months being a moron. I did little if anything that was irreprable, but the majority was ill-advised. I dealt with the majority of it last February, but none of it took away the damage of the prior relationship. Last summer I was briefly involved with someone who many know to be the “shopping list guy”. I’ve never been one of those girls who writes down and itemizes everything they want in a guy. Those people I’ve always rolled my eyes at and questioned the wisdom of such thinking, my theory being that if God had something else in mind, such predisposed expectations would be counterproductive. That said, in meeting this guy, I met what would have been my list. The entirety of my list. Everything from looks, height, family, personality, sense of humor, interests, level of communication, intellect, background, upbringing, love of God, love of children, values, even down to eye color…everything I wanted or could think of wanting was embodied by this person. I wrote him off as out of my league, but my opinion was vetoed by his immediate interest. We spent the next month or two getting to know each other, spending many evenings in conversation that ended in the wee hours of the morning. To many including our own opinions, we suited and complimented each other near perfectly. We made sense. But the timing was off. Well, the timing and an unidentifiable feeling that something wasn’t quite green-lighted. We cut off whatever was with no finality, just the understanding that at least at this time things weren’t right. There was no ill will on my part (quite the opposite) and no resentment. What did lodge its self, however, was a fear which would take root just a few weeks later.

Before those few weeks later, I had met the one I became involved with during a GO! Trip with RockHarbor. He was one of the higher-ups in the organization we were working with. There was immediate attraction. Immediate whatever, but all that was cut off and unquestionably cast aside the moment I saw the wedding band. End of story. To the best of my intentions, that is.

So, a few weeks later I met the other character in this story. We met through a sports connecting event through the church (where I’d met the List guy, interestingly enough) and had little interaction until running into each other at a mutual friends house. That evening we talked for quite a while, hit it off, and he got my number. A few nights later there was the phone call, then the following month or so of hanging out and the usual boy likes girl, girl likes boy nonsense. He wasn’t what I would have pictured for myself on a few counts but what I saw of his heart and personality was more that enough to spark interest. Alright, the exterior was appealing to match as well, but that’s besides the point. I let myself care about him, not on a major scale, but enough so that when the end came it hurt. I was upset, not because of who it was (he’s awesome, but that’s irrelevant) but because I saw it as a reinforcement of that fear I mentioned earlier. I took his decision to step back (which was completely understandable given his situation at the time and what he was/is going through) as a rejection to complete a series of rejections and the overwhelming fear and feeling was what I had ’learned’ from the previous summer, the previous guy, and now this one: I wasn’t enough.

This fear became something I accepted as reality. The last failed attempt at relationship was the one that tipped the scale and to this day the mention of this one carries a sting associated with it. The sting isn’t the fault of the one involved (still think he’s awesome), but the consequence and the knowledge of what transpired thereafter as a result is what causes the pain. What was hurt became fear. What was fear became reality. What was reality turned into vulnerability and weakness to that which I never would have dreamed possible. And all that led to what became a four and a half month long affair.

As I said, hurt makes you do the unthinkable. He came from a place of incredible hurt and disappointment. None of this excuses what took place. None of it makes it alright. Four months of heartache, guilt, pain, lies, fear, regret, disappointment both with myself and God, and the knowledge that I’d not only hurt myself but a multitude of others including those most dear to me, taught me much. During a quarter of a year, I witnessed more fights than I can count, became peacemaker in the most absurd of circumstances, became personal counselor and therapist to one with far more years than I, was made responsible for both my life and the lives of four others, practiced more crisis-intervention than most get in a lifetime, dealt with suicide attempts and threats (both personal and by association), and became the 24/7 lifeline and savior to someone who became my world. Every waking moment became consumed by this one. Between texts, phone calls, and emails there was never a moment (seriously) where one didn’t know the whereabouts and activities of the other. To say that it was co-dependent would be only a bit of an overstatement as my utter reliance upon him was still limited.

Why would someone in their right mind be addicted to something like this?

First of all, I’ll admit that by no stretch of the imagination was I in my right mind. Secondly, the above is only one side of the equation. The flip side was what I alluded to earlier. There was happiness, friendship, trust (up until an event more painful than any I’ve had to deal with. Ever.), companionship, and as previously stated everything I or he could humanly want. But that doesn’t change the bottom line which is the reality that it never should have happened in the first place.

There are dozens of details and situations which flesh out this skeleton to a far more interesting and dynamic story. Many stories people know, some they don’t. The details are incredibly relevant to the progression and outcome of this ordeal but they’re not solely mine for the telling. Besides, an expose is not the intention of this blog. The intention is to give those who have asked and I’ve brushed off the honesty that they deserve. That at the admission of wrong doing and the petition for forgiveness from those who I’ve pushed aside, hurt, and been an abominable representation of one claiming Christ.

A story of redemption can not exist without something to be redeemed. In my case, there is much. I look at the person I was a year ago with sorrow due to the recognition of the height from which I fell. It’s humbling. It’s heartbreaking. But it doesn’t have the final say.

The story of the Bible is not just a how-to of how to find God and salvation, it is a love story of a God who relentlessly pursues that which he created and adores. Through all of this, even though I acted in complete opposition to His commandments, He still pursued. He set me in situations and set key people around me which all pointed the way back to Him. Some of them know who they are, but I think the vast majority haven’t a clue how their presence and words have affected me and my choices. There’s the friends I’ve had for years and the ones for nearly a year who gave their opinions and thoughts on the matter without the judgment I expected and feared. There’s my parents…the most amazingly loving, unquestionably forgiving, yet completely forthcoming and directly correcting people that God could have gifted me with.

Then the ones who have no clue of their significance. One who’s sort conversation about being who you are regardless of what other people have to say, and who’s advice on a relationship he knew little about stayed with me and greatly influenced the final chapter of the story. His words, spoken through text of all things, gave me the resolve to make what would be the first cut in the relationship – a phone call between the other and I one Friday morning while I remained in the classroom. Though my relationship to this person may be trivial, my respect for him from what I have seen carries enough weight to matter.

The final cut came most unexpectedly from the one from last summer. The List guy, that is. I hadn’t seen him since September, but ran into him by chance in the hallway of RockHarbor on one very crucial Sunday. That’s another story, but his re-introduction to my life is what brought the strength for the ending of my situation. On March 20, nine days after the other had left the state on business, and less than a week after the initial rejected cut (I say this because it wasn’t something he accepted and still pursued contact, against the original agreement), After a four hour phone call (an average time span for our usual conversations in the past) I did what was necessary to end the relationship. Through those four hours, it was some of what had already been said by many, with the addition of concepts that could only reach me from this one. I said before that our communication was brilliant…still is. He can get through to me on levels few if any can. For both him and the one mentioned above, I thank God for.

Obviously there’s a lot missing in the details of all that happened then and since. My addiction to this one is something which, through only an act of God, has lost most of its hold. I still care about him and his well being and his future and all that – but none of it is my responsibility or concern. Ironically enough, it was in the first hours of Good Friday morning that I said “It is finished”, and on Easter Sunday started on a road that is unfamiliar and slightly daunting. It’s a road away from what was, both recent and long since past, and on towards what could be. It’s a mission taken without the aid of male companionship, something I hope for with the right timing, but that in the past has been far more significant that it should be. But all this potential responsibility and stress is something I no longer feel the weight of.

It’s all in His hands – as am I.

The Blog With Cold

I never thought it would end up this way
laying here alone to close out the harsh day
A day like so many before and now since
we changed so many lives with a single kiss

On a warm fall’s night, we tripped and fell
Fell not to the ground, a place we both know well
Instead we fell as one, while night turned to day
And we set out on a path that ended up this way

Now the silence that I find ringing in my ears
is the silence that echoes my deepest fear
Now I brace myself for the coming years
And lose the fight against threatening tears

These arms feel cold and I need you now
I need to love and let go but I don’t know how
This path is new and I’ve lost my light
I slip and fall in the cold dark night

Your words in my heart and I almost see your face
They take me away to a long lost place
The place where I found you, and you knew me
Amongst the limbs of the acorn tree

These verses can’t be closed with a simple ending
not while the much dreaded hope is still pending
As I lay down to sleep my eyes become dry
Seems I’ve lost the heart that caused them to cry.

But these arms feel cold and I need you now
I must fight to be free but I don’t know how
This path is new and my guide out of sight
I fight the black of this cold dark night

The Blog With Club 33

It is warm here. The gentle breeze from the fan above me softly touches my bare face, shoulders, and arms, giving a slight refreshing coolness while allowing the warmth of the comforter to remain. It has been a long day – one filled with many moments of happiness, a few of hilarity, but all with the backdrop of peace. A quiet contentment has managed to fill my being and still the continuous writhing within. It has been over much time, though many stages, and lately taken on a new form of concern, but all the while it has filled my head with a fog so dense that nothing can be seen past the preoccupation of what could be. Now, in this moment, I find myself resting in stillness and basking in the glow of a day that has burned bright.

This morning was full of anticipation for what would come. I was excited to return to the school and see the kids and various staff which have become so familiar to me. I was looking forward to the early afternoon and the unique outing I was scheduled to take part in. More than this, I was looking forward to seeing life in a different light…one where love was the mission statement and sorrow was a thing of the past. A grand statement for one who, but a week ago, was still stuck in the muddled and confusing waters of a beautifully broken relationship. Well, to be accurate, it wasn’t the relationship that was broken. As I tell anyone who asks me or insinuates that the other person involved was the source of pain and stress, it was not the relationship between him and I which was broken. That part was beautiful and wonderful and taught me so much about both love and myself. It was the circumstances and a horde of variables which were the source of the problem. Never the less, after a few soul purgings and the reading of some much needed words, I had finally found a level of peace that has been missing for a while.

This morning the guy I work with was in rare form. He was in a good mood, as was I. our rapport was awesome and something the kids could feed into as well. Though the kids had their moments (quite a few in my Teacher’s absence) we had a decent day with them and each other. My co-worker even had to admit his disapproval of my early departure for the day. I told them I had an appointment at 2 in the afternoon. This was a true statement, but was left misleading on purpose. I did have an appointment – an appointment with a group of friends at Disneyland’s Club 33. For those who are unaware, Club 33 is a hidden restaurant within Disneyland. It’s patrons are the elite who’s membership per year is well into the tens of thousands, and the club its self has a waiting list for membership of approximately 14 years (really). Bottom line: if you’re not a member or affiliated with one, you don’t get on the list – regardless of who you are (yes, even celebrities are turned away). And if you’re not on the list, you certainly aren’t getting in. The rules about this place and the code of conduct are ridiculous as well. So how did I manage to gain the invitation? A friend of mine’s mothers’ company has the privilege, and once every five years the family is granted entry to the club. This year, the mother is retiring, so we had a moderately sized party in the restaurant.

Gotta admit, it’s pretty cool to walk up to the unmarked door next to a simple “33″ placard to the right of the entry, lift the metal cover of the intercom, and let the people inside know you’re there and on the list. Then, as people around loiter, you and your party are escorted through the door and into the lobby. The atmosphere is not what I expected – not quite as ornate or plush as I thought it would be. The food was excellent – I had the halibut and lobster, and both the appetizer display and desserts were quite enjoyable. The problem is that I’ve spent the last four months being spoiled with excellent food. Between The Melting Pot, and New Orleans there has been an abundance of REALLY amazing food. So, I did feel a bit jaded when the remainder of the group did the appropriate “ooh!” and “Ahh!” and I thought to myself – “sure, it’s good. But the duck salad in New Orleans was better. And the lobster we cooked at home came pretty close too…”. Wow. Sad, isn’t it? Overall, I think it’s the status thing that holds the appeal for most people. It’s the ability to say, “Oh, you went to the Blue Bayou, I was at Club 33 with Tom Hanks and Madonna.” Or something like that. Yes, it even holds a mild portion of bragging rights for yours truly.

My error in all this was the decision of foot ware. This may sound asinine. The problem became the planning of costume change between work (think jeans I don’t care about, casual top, and beat up Diesel tennis shoes) and the acceptable attire required for the Club (Stupidly costly jeans, a comfortable but classy blue top, and heels). The restaurant requires that no flip flops, tennis shoes, or otherwise casual foot ware be worn. This left me with few options, and sadly my choice of wooden heels with leather straps turned out to be a really great idea for lunch but a terrible choice for spending the remainder of the day gallivanting around Disneyland. The end result is blisters on the tops AND bottoms of my feet. So lame.

But despite the pain and the problematic choice of clothing, the day was very cool. The club was a really unique experience and the rest of the day was spent with friends having fun in the amusement parks (part of the perks of membership to the club is guests dining receive the park hopper pass for both Disneyland and California Adventure). Another interesting note was that I left the park alone.

That sounds like a non-event, in fact to most it probably would be. For me, though, it was something slightly more meaningful than that. I left shortly after ten with the remainder of my group staying behind for the rest of the evening. What this meant was the trip from Autopia, through the crowd controlled mass of people watching the fireworks, winding through damn near half the park, the trip down Main Street, out the entrance, through Downtown Disney, on the tram, across the monstrosity of a building they call a parking structure, and to my awaiting van – all this done solo. I’m a girl (obviously) and not just a girl, a girl who used to be afraid of the dark, of crowds, afraid of the possibility of an unfortunate incident that could easily occur with a solo girl in the dark in a crowd…who winds up walking alone through the abandoned parking structure. I did find it odd that the males in my group did not insist on escorting me through such circumstances, but at the same time I was glad they did not. It gave me chance to do the journey alone…that is, physically alone.

I’ve spent a large part of the last few years allowing my safety and security to be directly tied to whichever male was at my side at the time. Though I do enjoy the feeling of being the smaller female being protected by a larger male, there does come a time when you have to be able to be self sufficient and go it alone. I came to this conclusion last night, and thus was more than happy to make the trip by myself…with the full awareness that I was protected by Something much bigger than anything that could possibly come up against me.

The best part of the last week or so has been that re-connection with my relationship with God. Between actually picking up my bible again (though, it’s a brand new one – the Amplified Translation…LOVE it) and constantly re-training my thought patterns away from myself and my nonsense to Him, things have been remarkably different. Along with this shift is the realization and acceptance that my solo status will likely not be short lived. A wordy way of saying, I expect to be alone for a while.

While shopping not too long ago (and many times prior) I noticed repeatedly that everything I looked at as a potential purchase was weighed against who would like it and what affect that would have. Of course lately it was aimed at the one who was close to me, and even more recently to a few select characters who’s approval seems remarkably important. This realization is nothing new. I’ve noticed it before, and as before, I sadly admitted that a great deal of my identity has been shaped by those around me – mostly men. Everything from my taste in music, to cars, to clothing and pastimes has morphed and chameleoned to whoever was on my radar at the time.

The most recent relationship wasn’t quite this way. We had enough in common and enough that complimented each other to where the vast majority of my identity remained unchanged. I did have the freedom to like and dislike what I wanted, because I liked and disliked some of what mattered to him. In the past it has been a combination of weakness of identity and a people-pleasing mentality that has caused me to change for the sake of another. I’ve written about all this before, so this idea probably doesn’t need to be voiced any further.

I guess the point is that my solo status is necessary. Any thoughts of potential what not are banished the moment they enter my head. It’s also important to note that by no means would I be ready to start something at this point. It’s FAR too soon and he meant FAR too much to move on that easily. This blog, I feel has been a cluster of tangents with little to tie the ideas together. Hopefully, the all do not follow in kind.

The Blog With The Space In Between

Though what follows was written prior to my recent relationship, I can’t help but notice how fitting it is for the present. I did alter one or two things to make it a bit more accurate, but otherwise it is as it was.

Hey there, Hello to the one I let go
Though we’re miles apart distance seems none
I saw you today in face far away
And a memory played like a film in my eyes
I remember the time
The place, then the crime
And I’m back in the place I was then
Your lips spoke such words I could never have dreamt
Words like honey from lips that kissed mine in love
But perhaps I am wrong
All that’s left is this song
And the silence that fills this space in between
Between you and me
And all that could be
But for now we’ll just wait and I suppose we will see.

Hey there, hello to the one down the road
Though your face I can’t be sure I have seen
I may have seen your eyes, how it felt when they looked into mine
But I fear it was all just a misguided dream
Now the dare just to hope
It’s just enough that I can’t cope
To once again put myself on the line
I’ll get by, and just lie, and pretend not to cry
And I’ll tell you not to worry I’ll be fine
But perhaps I am wrong
All that’s left is this song
And the silence that fills this space in between
Between you and me
And all that could be
For now we’ll just wait and I hope soon we’ll see.

Because I’m tired and I hurt and sometimes it just too much
To pretend I don’t need love, don’t need you, don’t need touch.

Its a lie
I’m not fine
In fact I break half the time
And I’m torn between then and what still could be to come
I look back at what I lack
In the space you’ve taken back
I put on a front just to push you away
I be callous and tough, then you turn – just my luck
And you do what I’d hoped all along
You leave and I’ll greave, and in the end it will be brief
Then I’ll sit alone and write out this song